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Related Documentation
- M, MX, T Series
- Fragmentation by Forwarding Class Overview
- Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Associating a Fragmentation Map with an MLPPP Interface or MLFR FRF.16 DLCI
- fragmentation-map
- M, MX, PTX, T Series
- Example: Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Example: Configuring Drop Timeout Interval by Forwarding Class
fragmentation-maps
Syntax
fragmentation-maps {map-name {forwarding-class class-name {drop-timeout milliseconds;fragment-threshold bytes;multilink-class number;no-fragmentation;}}}
Hierarchy Level
[edit class-of-service]
Release Information
Statement introduced before Junos OS Release 7.4.
Description
For AS PIC link services IQ (lsq) and virtual LSQ redundancy (rlsq) interfaces, define fragmentation properties for individual forwarding classes.
Default
If you do not include this statement, traffic in all forwarding classes is fragmented.
Options
map-name—Name of the fragmentation map.
The remaining statements are explained separately.
Required Privilege Level
interface—To view this statement in the configuration.
interface-control—To add this statement to the configuration.
Related Documentation
- M, MX, T Series
- Fragmentation by Forwarding Class Overview
- Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Associating a Fragmentation Map with an MLPPP Interface or MLFR FRF.16 DLCI
- fragmentation-map
- M, MX, PTX, T Series
- Example: Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Example: Configuring Drop Timeout Interval by Forwarding Class
Published: 2013-02-11
Related Documentation
- M, MX, T Series
- Fragmentation by Forwarding Class Overview
- Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Associating a Fragmentation Map with an MLPPP Interface or MLFR FRF.16 DLCI
- fragmentation-map
- M, MX, PTX, T Series
- Example: Configuring Fragmentation by Forwarding Class
- Example: Configuring Drop Timeout Interval by Forwarding Class